Interaction Driven Giant Electrostatic Modulation of Ion Permeation in Atomically Small Capillaries

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Abstract

Manipulating the electrostatic double layer (EDL) and tuning the conductance in nanofluidic systems at salt concentrations of 100 mM or higher has been a persistent challenge. The primary reasons are (i) the short electrostatic proximity length, ~3-10 Å, and (ii) difficulties in fabricating atomically small capillaries. Here, we successfully fabricated in-plane vermiculite laminates with transport heights of ~3-5 Å, which presented a cation selectivity close to 1 even at a 1000 mM concentration, suggesting an overlapping EDL. For gate voltages from -2 V to +1 V, the K+-intercalated vermiculite showed a remarkable conductivity modulation exceeding 1400% at a 1000 mM KCl concentration. The gated ON/OFF ratio is mostly unaffected by the ion concentration (10-1000 mM), which confirms that the EDL overlaps with the collective ion movement within the channel with reduced activation energy. In contrast, vermiculite laminates intercalated with Ca2+ and Al3+ ions displayed reduced conductance with increasing negative gate voltage, highlighting the importance of ion-specific gating effects under Å-scale confinement. Our findings contribute to a deeper understanding of electrostatic phenomena occurring in highly confined fluidic channels, opening the way to the exploration of the vast library of two-dimensional materials.

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